Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Putin says hypersonic missile should give opponents pause

- ANTON TROIANOVSK­I

Russia announced Wednesday it had successful­ly launched a new missile that could deploy nuclear warheads at hypersonic speeds anywhere in the world and outwit defenses, a move that President Vladimir Putin said was aimed at showing Russia’s adversarie­s that they needed to “think twice” before threatenin­g his country.

But even if the test was successful, the new missile does not appear ready for use. The Russian Defense Ministry said that Wednesday’s test launch of the Sarmat interconti­nental ballistic missile was its first and that it would enter Russia’s arsenal only “after the completion of the testing program.” There was no immediate comment from U.S. officials about the launch.

Putin first announced that Russia had developed the Sarmat in 2018, but his decision to test it Wednesday appeared intended to send a message in the middle of the war in Ukraine. Analysts have speculated that Putin could escalate the threat of using nuclear weapons to try to deter Western countries from supporting Ukraine and to force Ukraine to surrender.

“This truly unique weapon will force all who are trying to threaten our country in the heat of frenzied, aggressive rhetoric to think twice,” Putin said Wednesday.

The Defense Ministry released footage showing a white missile emerging from an undergroun­d silo at a snowy launch site in a ball of fire and then speeding into the sky. The launch took place at the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in northwest Russia, the ministry said, and the missile hit a target on the Kamchatka Peninsula 3,500 miles to the east.

Putin was shown overseeing the launch by video conference at the Kremlin and receiving a report from Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu. Putin said that the Sarmat consisted only of Russian-made components, a statement that has significan­ce in light of Western economic sanctions.

 ?? (AP/Roscosmos Space Agency Press Service) ?? A Sarmat interconti­nental ballistic missile blasts off Wednesday from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in northwest Russia. The Defense Ministry said the missile hit a target on the Kamchatka Peninsula 3,500 miles to the east.
(AP/Roscosmos Space Agency Press Service) A Sarmat interconti­nental ballistic missile blasts off Wednesday from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in northwest Russia. The Defense Ministry said the missile hit a target on the Kamchatka Peninsula 3,500 miles to the east.

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